TranslateProject/sources/tech/20200706 Set up Vim as your Rust IDE.md
DarkSun 9f9fd0b34c 选题[tech]: 20200706 Set up Vim as your Rust IDE
sources/tech/20200706 Set up Vim as your Rust IDE.md
2020-07-07 05:02:10 +08:00

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Set up Vim as your Rust IDE

The Vim text editor is a great development environment for programming Rust applications. Ferris the crab under the sea, unofficial logo for Rust programming language

The Rust programming language is designed to implement systems programming with safe concurrency and high memory performance in a way that feels familiar to C++ developers. It's also one of the most loved programming languages in Stack Overflow's 2019 Developer Survey.

Text editors and integrated development environment (IDE) tools make writing Rust code easier and quicker. There are many editors to choose from, but I believe the Vim editor is a great fit for a Rust IDE. In this article, I'll explain how to set up Vim for Rust application development.

Install Vim

Vim is one of the most commonly used command-line text editors in Linux and Unix. The latest version (as of this writing) is 8.2, and it offers more flexibility than ever in how you can use it.

Vim's download page provides multiple options to install it with binary or packages. For example, if you use macOS, you can install the MacVim project, then expand Vim's capabilities by installing Vim plugins.

To set up Rust for development, download Rustup, a handy Rust installer utility, and run the following in your terminal (if you use macOS, Linux, or any other Unix-like operating system):

`$ curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh`

Choose an installation option from the interactive prompt. Then you will see output like:

stable installed - rustc 1.43.1 (8d69840ab 2020-05-04)

Rust is installed now. Great!

To get started you need Cargo's bin directory ($HOME/.cargo/bin) in your PATH
environment variable. Next time you log in this will be done
automatically.

To configure your current shell run source $HOME/.cargo/env

Syntax highlighting

Vim allows you to configure your runtime by defining it in the .vimrc file. To enable syntax highlighting, open your .vimrc file (or create one if it doesn't exist):

`$ vim ~/.vimrc`

Add the following in the .vimrc file and save it:

filetype plugin indent on
syntax on

The first line turns on the detection, plugin, and indent configurations all at once. The second line enables syntax highlighting. These features will help you manage your developer workflow in Rust. Learn more in Vim's help file.

Create a Rust application in Vim

To create a new Rust HelloWorld application (hello.rs) using Vim, enter:

`$ vim hello.rs`

Enter the following Rust code to print Hello World! in the console:

 fn main() {
      println!("Hello World");
 }

It should look something like this:

Rust code with syntax highlighting

(Daniel Oh, CC BY-SA 4.0)

Here's what it would look like without syntax highlighting:

Rust code without syntax highlighting

(Daniel Oh, CC BY-SA 4.0)

Did you notice how Vim automatically indented and organized the code? That is because of the first line you entered in the .vimrc file.

Great job! Next, you will build this application using Rust's package manager, Cargo.

Cargo integrations

Cargo makes creating applications easier. To see how, create a Cargo-based HelloWorld application. If you don't already have Cargo installed on your Linux or macOS system, enter:

`$ curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh`

Then create a package with Cargo:

`$ cargo new my_hello_world`

If you look at the directory structure, you'll see Cargo automatically generated some source code and directories. If you have tree installed, run it to see the directory structure:

$ tree my_hello_world
my_hello_world
├── Cargo.toml
└── src
    └── main.rs

1 directory, 2 files

Open the main.rs source code file in Vim:

`$ vim my_hello_world/src/main.rs`

The code is the same as in the HelloWorld example you created manually above. Replace World with Rust with Vim:

 fn main() {
      println!("Hello, Rust with Vim");
 }

Use :wq to save your changes and quit Vim.

Compile your application

Now you can compile your first Rust application using cargo build:

$ cd my_hello_world
$ cargo build

Your terminal output will look similar to this:

   Compiling my_hello_world v0.1.0 (/Users/danieloh/cloud-native-app-dev/rust/my_hello_world)

    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.60s

You may see a warning message because you reused the sample package name, my_hello_world, but you can ignore it for now.

Run the application:

$ target/debug/my_hello_world
Hello, Rust with Vim!

You can also use cargo run to build and run the application all at once:

$ cargo run
 
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.00s
     Running `target/debug/my_hello_world`
Hello, Rust with Vim!!

Congratulations! You set up Vim editor for Rust IDE on your local machine, developed your first Rust application, and built, tested, and ran it using the Cargo package manager tool. Run cargo help If you want to learn other Cargo commands.


via: https://opensource.com/article/20/7/vim-rust-ide

作者:Daniel Oh 选题:lujun9972 译者:译者ID 校对:校对者ID

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